Repairing PowerBook 140 standoffs

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
I acquired a PowerBook 140 for around 50 bucks a month or so ago; it has many problems but one of which being is that many of the internal stands are cracked/missing/broken off. I'm looking for solutions to repair these, as many of them no longer have their original plastic, meaning I can't simply glue them back on. 3D printing would be my best solution in this scenario but I'm not sure where to find proper standoffs as some are different heights to each other.
Any suggestions are appreciated, and I can provide photos if needed.
 

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
The LCD, 2 of the keyboard, and a few of the bottom case. The LCD is probably the easiest, although I'm not sure what heat inserts I should use (I don't have the original as the owner did a mod where he installed mounting hardware to fix the hinges).
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4836.jpeg
    IMG_4836.jpeg
    327.4 KB · Views: 67
  • IMG_4837.jpeg
    IMG_4837.jpeg
    408.7 KB · Views: 73
  • IMG_4838.jpeg
    IMG_4838.jpeg
    481.7 KB · Views: 68

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA

3lectr1c

Active Tinkerer
May 15, 2022
634
295
63
the United States
www.macdat.net
Think those are the ones for the bottom case. Not sure about the keyboard, you’ve got a really rough system there. You may want to look for a plastics donor, usually you’ll end up with a few damaged for the drive cage mounts but the keyboard mounts and stuff like that are usually fine.
 

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
@3lectr1c I found some more appropriate screw bosses for my PowerBook, since the one that you linked only works with the smaller screw standoffs and not the taller versions. However, I'm debating whether or not I should glue the inserts with the SLA version (fdm printed) or heat insert the brass inserts with the FDM version.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 3lectr1c

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
Perhaps @mmu_man, who has already designed several replacement PB parts, could help?

I don’t think there’s much that could really be improved, but there are some things that could make the process easier, such as making the boss holes tampered so the old inserts can sit slightly before being heated up.
 

mmu_man

Tinkerer
Jan 30, 2022
163
85
28
I have a 180c open on my table here and some posts are partially broken, but I wanted to try and glue them back first. Anyway, can't look at it until next week.
 

retr01

Senior Tinkerer
Jun 6, 2022
2,473
1
796
113
Utah, USA
retr01.com
I don’t think there’s much that could really be improved, but there are some things that could make the process easier, such as making the boss holes tampered so the old inserts can sit slightly before being heated up.

Yeah.

As the community continues to develop replacement case parts that can be 3D printed for the PBs, we can at least make the PBs usable again as they should have been, such as replacement elevation foot or I/O door posted here on Tinker Different under the 3D printing section.

@Dogmander, are the standoffs something like to seat a drive or board on like this?

1685045425505.png
 

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
No, those are not
Yeah.

As the community continues to develop replacement case parts that can be 3D printed for the PBs, we can at least make the PBs usable again as they should have been, such as replacement elevation foot or I/O door posted here on Tinker Different under the 3D printing section.

@Dogmander, are the standoffs something like to seat a drive or board on like this?

View attachment 12445
what I’m referring to. The standoffs are what you use to screw down the motherboard and hard drive cage
 

This Does Not Compute

Administrator
Staff member
Oct 27, 2021
295
438
63
www.youtube.com
@3lectr1c I found some more appropriate screw bosses for my PowerBook, since the one that you linked only works with the smaller screw standoffs and not the taller versions. However, I'm debating whether or not I should glue the inserts with the SLA version (fdm printed) or heat insert the brass inserts with the FDM version.
Having done several standoff replacements, I'm confident in the strength of brass inserts that have been melted into FDM parts. I have no basis for comparison of the strength of FDM vs SLA parts themselves in this application, though -- my gut tells me it probably doesn't matter.
 

Dogmander

New Tinkerer
May 9, 2023
10
4
3
Ohio, USA
I was able to glue and install the 3d printed bosses, and heat the inserts into them. I’m not sure how strong they will be in the long run, but they are holding up well enough now.
Now I can work on fixing up the top half of the case, as well as the screen hinge mounts.

B9069806-C15B-4EEB-B029-DD6F3611B4BA.jpeg